US4258622A - Method of positioning a moving part and a printer operating in accordance with said method - Google Patents

Method of positioning a moving part and a printer operating in accordance with said method Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US4258622A
US4258622A US06/095,267 US9526779A US4258622A US 4258622 A US4258622 A US 4258622A US 9526779 A US9526779 A US 9526779A US 4258622 A US4258622 A US 4258622A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
pulses
pulse
moving unit
point
disc
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US06/095,267
Inventor
Stephane Estrabaud
Gerard Nourigat
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
GENERALE D'AUTOMATISME Cie SA
Compagnie Generale dAutomatisme SA
Original Assignee
Compagnie Generale dAutomatisme SA
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Compagnie Generale dAutomatisme SA filed Critical Compagnie Generale dAutomatisme SA
Assigned to SOCIETE ANONYME DITE: COMPAGNIE GENERALE D'AUTOMATISME reassignment SOCIETE ANONYME DITE: COMPAGNIE GENERALE D'AUTOMATISME ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST. Assignors: ESTRABAUD STEPHANE, NOURIGAT GERARD
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US4258622A publication Critical patent/US4258622A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02PCONTROL OR REGULATION OF ELECTRIC MOTORS, ELECTRIC GENERATORS OR DYNAMO-ELECTRIC CONVERTERS; CONTROLLING TRANSFORMERS, REACTORS OR CHOKE COILS
    • H02P8/00Arrangements for controlling dynamo-electric motors of the kind having motors rotating step by step
    • H02P8/32Reducing overshoot or oscillation, e.g. damping

Definitions

  • the invention relates to a method of shifting a moving unit controlled by a stepping motor when, in an interval between two steps the moving unit is liable to oscillate about an equilibrium position.
  • the invention also relates to a disc-type printer which operates in accordance with the method of the invention.
  • the invention will be described with reference to the example of a rotary movement such as that of a printer disc, but it is applicable to all stepping movements in which the moving unit is liable to describe oscillations which can be substantially represented by a second-order system which is not critically damped.
  • the oscillating movement which follows the last pulse may continue for a relatively long time during which the position of the moving unit varies continually about the required position without stopping there. It is known to mitigate this disadvantage by means of a damping device; however, to be effective, this damping device must be able to damp appreciable energy; this increases its weight its bulk and its cost and subjects the motor to extra stresses.
  • German published patent application no. 2 042 903 describes an attempt to obtain this result by a particular method of defining the time interval between the last two pulses.
  • the desired result is not obtained, since it requires both the rotor inertia to be matched to a specific value and the total number of pulses to be sufficiently large with respect to the damping coefficient for the moving unit to have achieved steady state motion before the last pulse but one is applied thereto.
  • the present invention provides a method of shifting a moving unit from a first position to a second position by means of a stepping motor driven by a finite sequence of pulses, said moving unit being liable to oscillate about its equilibrium point, the time intervals which separate said pulses being chosen as a function of the period and of the damping factor of the oscillation so that the last pulse is applied to the motor at an instant when the oscillation resulting from the set of preceding pulses brings the moving unit substantially to the required final position and reduces its speed substantially to zero, and wherein the last pulse but one of the sequence of pulses is applied to the motor at an instant when the point which represents the shift of the moving unit caused by said pulse and as shown in the phase-plane chart at a point centred on the equilibrium point resulting from said pulse is substantially located on the spiral which passes through the zero speed point and through the point of the x-axis equal to the amplitude of the last step.
  • the pulses other than the last and the first are applied at instants when the point which represents the shift of the moving unit, said shift being caused by each pulse and shown in the chart on the equilibrium point resulting from said pulse, is substantially located on said spiral.
  • the invention further provides a disc-type printer which includes a rotating disc which bears a set of characters and which can be driven by a stepping motor to place the required character in the required printing position, said disc being liable to oscillate about its equilibrium position; means for positioning the paper and making it advance; means for pressing the paper against the disc when said disc is substantially motionless; means which supply the motor with pulses; and means for triggering pulses at defined intervals; characterized in that the last pulse but one is applied to the motor in such a manner that the point on the phase plane chart representative of the motion of the moving parts after said last pulse but one, and with respect to the equilibrium position of the parts at that moment is situated on the spiral which passes through the zero speed point on the x-axis at a displacement corresponding to the last pulse and wherein the last pulse is applied to the motor substantially at the moment when the moving parts are in the desired final position.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates schematically a disc-type printer as an example of an application of the method in accordance with the invention
  • FIG. 2 is a graph of the oscillations x of the disc as a function of time for two distinct series of four pulses one of which corresponds to the method in accordance with the invention.
  • FIG. 3 is a chart which enables the time intervals between the pulses to be determined.
  • a printer includes a printing disc 1 which bears a set of characters in relief. It is installed on a shaft 2 driven by a stepping motor 3 which is driven by a pulse generator 4. Each pulse from the pulse generator makes the printing disc rotate through an angle equal to the gap between two successive characters or to an integer fraction thereof.
  • the pulse generator 4 is dependent on a sequencer 5 which determines the instant when each pulse is to be applied to the motor. Since it is necessary for the sequencer to be informed of the number of steps which separate the initial state from the required final state, it advantageously includes a clock oscillator whose frequency is higher than the resonant frequencies of the moving unit, together with a programmed divider which supplies pulses at successive time intervals obtained by dividing the clock frequency.
  • the sequencer also receives a starting instruction which triggers the first pulse.
  • the printer also includes an inking ribbon, not shown in the figure, and paper feed and support means 6 as well as a hammer 7 which strikes the paper against the character when the disc stops in the required position.
  • the disc 1 and the shaft 2 constitute a very lightly damped mass and spring system whose oscillation, in the prior art, makes it essential to delay actuating the hammer after the last positioning pulse until the movement is damped, so as to avoid hammer contact to either side of the character and to prevent the character from sliding during printing. This greatly slows down the printing speed.
  • said last pulse aims only to cancel the residual elastic potential energy. Since the kinetic energy itself is low, the amplitude of the final oscillation is negligible and printing can take place at once.
  • FIG. 2 is a graph of the rotational movement x of the disc as a function of time t during two sequences of four pulses.
  • the first of these sequences (SQ1) is constituted by equal intervals, while the second (SQ2) has irregular intervals.
  • the corresponding curves C1 and C2 show that the disc can be stabilized much more rapidly when, as in sequence SQ2, the intervals are in accordance with the invention, so that the last pulse is generated at the instant when the moving unit is close to its required final position and is moving at a speed close to zero.
  • FIG. 3 is a chart which facilitates the choice of these intervals and, in particular, makes it easy to ensure compatibility between two requirements, namely low speed and position near to the required final position. This compatibility imposes a relationship between intervals other than the last interval.
  • the chart shows the free oscillation movement of a second-order system in the phase plane.
  • the position x of the moving unit is plotted against the x-axis and its speed dx/dt is plotted along the y-axis.
  • Damping is not necessarily linear, but it is assumed that it depends only on x and dx/dt. This ensures that the paths are unique. Experience has shown that in many cases, this assumption can be an entirely satisfactory first approximation. It should also be observed that to a limited degree, the physical parameters and the time intervals may differ from the idealised assumptions and intervals calculated strictly in accordance with the chart.
  • the point which represents the oscillatory movement is compelled to move clockwise round a spiral, whose parametric co-ordinates are deduced in a known manner from the physical parameters of the device, (i.e. its damping factor and the period of the damped oscillations).
  • the choice of initial conditions determines which spiral in the family of spirals is the one effectively followed.
  • each pulse gives rise to rapid translation of the representative point in a horizontal direction from right to left. Translation takes place over a distance equal to a unit step which, in practice, is constant and equal to the total movement divided by the number of steps but, theoretically speaking, nothing prevents the steps from being unequal to one another. Such inequality does not go beyond the scope of the invention.
  • spiral paths are in the same direction and the total path is constituted by an alternation of spiral segments linked by horizontal straight line segments.
  • the spirals can be graduated in absolute units of time or, more conveniently, in units related to the resonant period; in either case the difference in graduation between the starting point and the end of a spiral segment is representative of the length of the time interval between corresponding pulses.
  • FIG. 3 shows an example of a graphical construction making use of this representation.
  • the symbolic point representative of the system is initially at the origin 0 of the co-ordinates, and passes through A as soon as the first pulse is generated, the co-ordinates of the point A being -X and 0, where the letter X is the unit step.
  • the symbolic point then moves along the spiral which passes through A (initial spiral) in a clockwise direction.
  • the symbolic point is at B and the second pulse is applied.
  • the symbolic point then moves rapidly in a translation movement equal to -X and is therefore brought to C.
  • the point C is situated on the spiral which passes through the point D whose co-ordinates are +X and 0 (final spiral). This allows the symbolic point to be returned to 0 by applying the third pulse at the instant when the symbolic point is at D. In accordance with the invention, this effectively leads to a shift through three steps which ends in the required position and at zero speed.
  • the material arrangement of the chart is deduced immediately from FIG. 3.
  • the initial spiral and the final spiral which correspond to estimated or measured damping of the moving unit are traced on a sheet.
  • the unit step is constant, it is chosen as the unit of length.
  • the spirals are graduated in time units related to the period with any origin as required.
  • Other spirals of the family can optionally be drawn if the problem justifies the use of more than four different interval values, e.g. to reduce to a minimum the total time or to evaluate the effect on the final result of an error in the physical magnitudes or of rounding off the durations of the time intervals.
  • a transparent paper sheet will bear the segment of a horizontal straight line of unit length or segments of varying lengths if the step is not constant.
  • the transparent paper, maintained horizontal on the sheet, will be moved thereon until its position is identical to that in FIG. 3 and the intervals will be read on the graduations of the spirals.

Abstract

The invention comes within the field of equipment control. A method of shifting a moving unit from a first position to a second position by means of a stepping motor driven by a finite sequence of pulses, said moving unit being liable to oscillate about its equilibrium point, characterized in that as a function of the period and of the damping factor of the oscillation, the time intervals which separate said pulses are chosen so that the last pulse is applied to the motor at an instant when the oscillation resulting from the set of preceding pulses brings the moving unit substantially to the required final position and reduces its speed substantially to zero. It applies in particular to disc-type printers.

Description

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a method of shifting a moving unit controlled by a stepping motor when, in an interval between two steps the moving unit is liable to oscillate about an equilibrium position.
The invention also relates to a disc-type printer which operates in accordance with the method of the invention.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention will be described with reference to the example of a rotary movement such as that of a printer disc, but it is applicable to all stepping movements in which the moving unit is liable to describe oscillations which can be substantially represented by a second-order system which is not critically damped.
If said time intervals between successive steps are not suitably chosen, the oscillating movement which follows the last pulse (and which may be due e.g. to the inertia of the moving unit and to the elasticity of the mechanical transmission parts) may continue for a relatively long time during which the position of the moving unit varies continually about the required position without stopping there. It is known to mitigate this disadvantage by means of a damping device; however, to be effective, this damping device must be able to damp appreciable energy; this increases its weight its bulk and its cost and subjects the motor to extra stresses.
German published patent application no. 2 042 903 describes an attempt to obtain this result by a particular method of defining the time interval between the last two pulses. However, it is clear that if the teaching of the application is followed, the desired result is not obtained, since it requires both the rotor inertia to be matched to a specific value and the total number of pulses to be sufficiently large with respect to the damping coefficient for the moving unit to have achieved steady state motion before the last pulse but one is applied thereto. These requirements are not specifically stated in the said specification, but they follow from the analysis of the problem.
The present invention provides a method of shifting a moving unit from a first position to a second position by means of a stepping motor driven by a finite sequence of pulses, said moving unit being liable to oscillate about its equilibrium point, the time intervals which separate said pulses being chosen as a function of the period and of the damping factor of the oscillation so that the last pulse is applied to the motor at an instant when the oscillation resulting from the set of preceding pulses brings the moving unit substantially to the required final position and reduces its speed substantially to zero, and wherein the last pulse but one of the sequence of pulses is applied to the motor at an instant when the point which represents the shift of the moving unit caused by said pulse and as shown in the phase-plane chart at a point centred on the equilibrium point resulting from said pulse is substantially located on the spiral which passes through the zero speed point and through the point of the x-axis equal to the amplitude of the last step.
Preferably the pulses other than the last and the first are applied at instants when the point which represents the shift of the moving unit, said shift being caused by each pulse and shown in the chart on the equilibrium point resulting from said pulse, is substantially located on said spiral.
The invention further provides a disc-type printer which includes a rotating disc which bears a set of characters and which can be driven by a stepping motor to place the required character in the required printing position, said disc being liable to oscillate about its equilibrium position; means for positioning the paper and making it advance; means for pressing the paper against the disc when said disc is substantially motionless; means which supply the motor with pulses; and means for triggering pulses at defined intervals; characterized in that the last pulse but one is applied to the motor in such a manner that the point on the phase plane chart representative of the motion of the moving parts after said last pulse but one, and with respect to the equilibrium position of the parts at that moment is situated on the spiral which passes through the zero speed point on the x-axis at a displacement corresponding to the last pulse and wherein the last pulse is applied to the motor substantially at the moment when the moving parts are in the desired final position.
The invention will be better understood from the description of an embodiment given hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawing.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 illustrates schematically a disc-type printer as an example of an application of the method in accordance with the invention;
FIG. 2 is a graph of the oscillations x of the disc as a function of time for two distinct series of four pulses one of which corresponds to the method in accordance with the invention; and
FIG. 3 is a chart which enables the time intervals between the pulses to be determined.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
With reference to FIG. 1, a printer includes a printing disc 1 which bears a set of characters in relief. It is installed on a shaft 2 driven by a stepping motor 3 which is driven by a pulse generator 4. Each pulse from the pulse generator makes the printing disc rotate through an angle equal to the gap between two successive characters or to an integer fraction thereof. The pulse generator 4 is dependent on a sequencer 5 which determines the instant when each pulse is to be applied to the motor. Since it is necessary for the sequencer to be informed of the number of steps which separate the initial state from the required final state, it advantageously includes a clock oscillator whose frequency is higher than the resonant frequencies of the moving unit, together with a programmed divider which supplies pulses at successive time intervals obtained by dividing the clock frequency. The sequencer also receives a starting instruction which triggers the first pulse.
The printer also includes an inking ribbon, not shown in the figure, and paper feed and support means 6 as well as a hammer 7 which strikes the paper against the character when the disc stops in the required position.
The disc 1 and the shaft 2 constitute a very lightly damped mass and spring system whose oscillation, in the prior art, makes it essential to delay actuating the hammer after the last positioning pulse until the movement is damped, so as to avoid hammer contact to either side of the character and to prevent the character from sliding during printing. This greatly slows down the printing speed. In contrast, in accordance with the invention, when the disc is in the neighbourhood of the required position and just before the last pulse it is already rotating at low speed, so said last pulse aims only to cancel the residual elastic potential energy. Since the kinetic energy itself is low, the amplitude of the final oscillation is negligible and printing can take place at once.
FIG. 2 is a graph of the rotational movement x of the disc as a function of time t during two sequences of four pulses. The first of these sequences (SQ1) is constituted by equal intervals, while the second (SQ2) has irregular intervals. The corresponding curves C1 and C2 show that the disc can be stabilized much more rapidly when, as in sequence SQ2, the intervals are in accordance with the invention, so that the last pulse is generated at the instant when the moving unit is close to its required final position and is moving at a speed close to zero.
FIG. 3 is a chart which facilitates the choice of these intervals and, in particular, makes it easy to ensure compatibility between two requirements, namely low speed and position near to the required final position. This compatibility imposes a relationship between intervals other than the last interval.
In FIG. 3, the chart shows the free oscillation movement of a second-order system in the phase plane. The position x of the moving unit is plotted against the x-axis and its speed dx/dt is plotted along the y-axis. Damping is not necessarily linear, but it is assumed that it depends only on x and dx/dt. This ensures that the paths are unique. Experience has shown that in many cases, this assumption can be an entirely satisfactory first approximation. It should also be observed that to a limited degree, the physical parameters and the time intervals may differ from the idealised assumptions and intervals calculated strictly in accordance with the chart. Indeed, providing the difference from the required final position is slight and the residual speed is low at the moment the last pulse is applied, the corresponding potential and kinetic energy will also be low, thereby enabling sufficient steadying to be applied by a relatively light damping device. It has been found that the mere pressure on the disc of the paper struck by the hammer can suffice to prevent the character from sliding.
Returning to the idealized representation of the chart, the point which represents the oscillatory movement is compelled to move clockwise round a spiral, whose parametric co-ordinates are deduced in a known manner from the physical parameters of the device, (i.e. its damping factor and the period of the damped oscillations). The choice of initial conditions determines which spiral in the family of spirals is the one effectively followed.
By taking the x-axis to represent the algebraic difference between the absolute position of the moving unit and the equilibrium position that would result from the pulses already applied to the unit (taking no account of any future pulses), rather than the absolute position itself, it has been found possible to use a single figure to represent the paths which correspond to the various intervals between a plurality of pulses. On the chart, each pulse gives rise to rapid translation of the representative point in a horizontal direction from right to left. Translation takes place over a distance equal to a unit step which, in practice, is constant and equal to the total movement divided by the number of steps but, theoretically speaking, nothing prevents the steps from being unequal to one another. Such inequality does not go beyond the scope of the invention. All the spiral paths are in the same direction and the total path is constituted by an alternation of spiral segments linked by horizontal straight line segments. The spirals can be graduated in absolute units of time or, more conveniently, in units related to the resonant period; in either case the difference in graduation between the starting point and the end of a spiral segment is representative of the length of the time interval between corresponding pulses.
FIG. 3 shows an example of a graphical construction making use of this representation. The symbolic point representative of the system is initially at the origin 0 of the co-ordinates, and passes through A as soon as the first pulse is generated, the co-ordinates of the point A being -X and 0, where the letter X is the unit step. The symbolic point then moves along the spiral which passes through A (initial spiral) in a clockwise direction. After a time, the symbolic point is at B and the second pulse is applied. The symbolic point then moves rapidly in a translation movement equal to -X and is therefore brought to C. In the figure, the point C is situated on the spiral which passes through the point D whose co-ordinates are +X and 0 (final spiral). This allows the symbolic point to be returned to 0 by applying the third pulse at the instant when the symbolic point is at D. In accordance with the invention, this effectively leads to a shift through three steps which ends in the required position and at zero speed.
If there are more steps than three, one or several extra segments of straight lines must be intercalated, the ends of the segments and the beginnings of the following ones being situated on the same spiral. Therefore, in general, there is an infinite number of solutions to the problem, only the first and the last spirals being defined by the parameters of any given moving unit. In one variant, which is preferable for its simplicity but which is given here by way of a non-limiting example, the final spiral is joined as soon as possible and the intermediate straight lines have both of their ends located thereon as does PQ in FIG. 3. This has the advantage of making it possible for a positioning device in accordance with the invention to require a maximum of only four different values for the intervals between pulses to cope with any pulse train of four or more pulses (if a three-pulse train is used there is a need for a special case interval corresponding to the spiral path CD).
The material arrangement of the chart is deduced immediately from FIG. 3. The initial spiral and the final spiral which correspond to estimated or measured damping of the moving unit are traced on a sheet. In the most frequent case, where the unit step is constant, it is chosen as the unit of length. This sets the points A and D at -1 and +1 on the x-axis. The spirals are graduated in time units related to the period with any origin as required. Other spirals of the family can optionally be drawn if the problem justifies the use of more than four different interval values, e.g. to reduce to a minimum the total time or to evaluate the effect on the final result of an error in the physical magnitudes or of rounding off the durations of the time intervals. Further, a transparent paper sheet will bear the segment of a horizontal straight line of unit length or segments of varying lengths if the step is not constant. The transparent paper, maintained horizontal on the sheet, will be moved thereon until its position is identical to that in FIG. 3 and the intervals will be read on the graduations of the spirals.

Claims (6)

We claim:
1. A method of shifting a moving unit from a first position to a second position by means of a stepping motor driven by a finite sequence of pulses, said moving unit being liable to oscillate about its equilibrium point, said method comprising choosing the time intervals which separate said pulses as a function of the period and of the damping factor of the oscillation so that the last pulse is applied to the motor at an instant when the oscillation resulting from the set of preceding pulses brings the moving unit substantially to the required final position and reduces its speed substantially to zero, the improvement comprising applying the last pulse but one of the sequence of pulses to the motor at the instant when the point which represents the shift of the moving unit caused by said pulse and as shown in a phase-plane chart at a point centered on the equilibrium point resulting from said pulse is substantially located on the spiral which passes through the zero speed point and through the point of the x-axis equal to the amplitude of the last step.
2. A method of shifting a moving unit according to claim 1, further comprising applying the pulses other than the last and the first at instants when the point which represents the shift of the moving unit, said shift being caused by each pulse and shown in the chart on the equilibrium point resulting from said pulse, is substantially located on said spiral.
3. A method of shifting a moving unit according to claim 1, further comprising applying the pulses such that the steps between pulses are of identical amplitude.
4. A disc-type printer comprising a rotatable disc bearing a set of characters, a stepping motor for driving said rotating disc to place the required character in the required printing position, said disc being liable to oscillate about its equilibrium position; means for positioning a paper in juxtaposition to said rotating disc and for causing it to advance; means for pressing the paper against the disc when said disc is substantially motionless; means for applying pulses to said motor, the time intervals which separate said pulses being chosen as a function of the period and of the damping factor of the oscillation so that the last pulse is applied to the motor at an instant when the oscillation resulting from the set of preceding pulses brings the moving unit substantially to the required final position and reduces its speed substantially to zero; and means for triggering pulses at defined intervals; wherein the last pulse but one is applied to the motor in such a manner that the point on a phase-plane chart representative of the motion of the moving parts after said last pulse but one, and with respect to the equilibrium position of the parts at that moment is situated on a spiral which passes through the zero speed point on the x-axis at a displacement corresponding to the last pulse and wherein the last pulse is applied to the motor substantially at the moment when the moving parts are in the desired final position.
5. A disc-type printer according to claim 4, wherein said means for triggering pulses at defined intervals further comprises means for applying said pulses other than the last and first at instants when the point which represents the shift of the moving unit, said shift being caused by each pulse and shown in the chart on the equilibrium point resulting from said pulse, is substantially located on said spiral.
6. A disc-type printer according to claim 4, wherein said means for triggering pulses at defined intervals further comprises means for applying said pulses such that the steps between pulses are of identical amplitude.
US06/095,267 1978-11-17 1979-11-19 Method of positioning a moving part and a printer operating in accordance with said method Expired - Lifetime US4258622A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
FR7832501 1978-11-17
FR7832501A FR2441879A1 (en) 1978-11-17 1978-11-17 METHOD FOR POSITIONING A MOBILE AND PRINTER OPERATING ACCORDING TO SAID METHOD

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US4258622A true US4258622A (en) 1981-03-31

Family

ID=9215008

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US06/095,267 Expired - Lifetime US4258622A (en) 1978-11-17 1979-11-19 Method of positioning a moving part and a printer operating in accordance with said method

Country Status (11)

Country Link
US (1) US4258622A (en)
EP (1) EP0011260B1 (en)
JP (1) JPS5577397A (en)
AT (1) ATE5503T1 (en)
AU (1) AU524074B2 (en)
CA (1) CA1145440A (en)
DE (1) DE2966451D1 (en)
DK (1) DK487579A (en)
ES (1) ES486045A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2441879A1 (en)
NO (1) NO152328C (en)

Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4414497A (en) * 1981-01-22 1983-11-08 Verbatim Corporation Digitally controllable electronic damper
DE3221561A1 (en) * 1982-06-08 1983-12-08 Triumph-Adler Aktiengesellschaft für Büro- und Informationstechnik, 8500 Nürnberg Method for quickly positioning a type wheel driven by a step motor
US4518308A (en) * 1982-03-01 1985-05-21 Acrobe Technology Inc. Manipulator apparatus
US4541334A (en) * 1984-10-24 1985-09-17 Micr Short Systems, Ltd. MICR Printer
US4589790A (en) * 1984-05-29 1986-05-20 International Business Machines Corporation Method and apparatus for controlling escapement
US4624588A (en) * 1983-11-08 1986-11-25 Maverick Microsystems, Inc. Full field MICR encoder
US4745346A (en) * 1984-10-04 1988-05-17 Pitney Bowes Inc. Electronic postage meter print wheel setting optimization system
US4746847A (en) * 1985-05-17 1988-05-24 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Control system for a stepping motor
US4843294A (en) * 1987-12-01 1989-06-27 Ford Aerospace & Communications Corporation Solar array stepping to minimize array excitation
US5227709A (en) * 1990-10-09 1993-07-13 Seagate Technology, Inc. Closed loop single step response by open winding voltage feedback system and method for multiple phase step motors
US5262907A (en) * 1991-07-31 1993-11-16 Seagate Technology, Inc. Hard disc drive with improved servo system
US5415480A (en) * 1983-02-23 1995-05-16 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Printer having a stepping motor for driving and retaining a type wheel
US5574351A (en) * 1994-10-21 1996-11-12 Pitney Bowes Inc. Method and apparatus for control of stepper motors
US5583410A (en) * 1994-10-21 1996-12-10 Pitney Bowes Inc. Method and apparatus for multiplex control of a plurality of stepper motors
US6064171A (en) * 1999-06-11 2000-05-16 Lexmark, International, Inc. Host based stepper motor phase controller and method therefor
US20080088385A1 (en) * 2006-10-13 2008-04-17 Andrew Roman Gizara Pulse width modulation sequence generating a near critical damped step response

Citations (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3573589A (en) * 1969-04-01 1971-04-06 Burroughs Corp Position servo system for a motor including detenting at destination
US3586953A (en) * 1967-09-22 1971-06-22 Fairchild Camera Instr Co Stepper motor control system
US3588661A (en) * 1968-04-24 1971-06-28 Mesur Matic Electronics Corp Electronic damping for stepping motors
DE2042903A1 (en) * 1970-08-29 1972-03-02 Berger Gerhard Procedure for avoiding or reducing the flooding of the rotors of stepper motors after the last previously selected pulse
US3864615A (en) * 1971-09-13 1975-02-04 Royal Industries Electronic programmer for multi-phase motor
US4025837A (en) * 1975-06-30 1977-05-24 International Business Machines Corporation Adaptive control circuit for a stepping motor
US4074179A (en) * 1975-06-16 1978-02-14 Warner Electric Brake & Clutch Company Position detection methods and apparatus for stepping motors
US4115726A (en) * 1977-01-04 1978-09-19 Hewlett-Packard Company Open-loop electric drive with corrective controller
DE2721271A1 (en) * 1977-05-11 1978-11-16 Siemens Ag CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENT FOR SYNCHRONIZING A TYPE CARRIER IN PRINTING DEVICES
US4131840A (en) * 1976-09-16 1978-12-26 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Circuit arrangement for setting a rotatable type carrier over the shortest path of rotation
US4142140A (en) * 1976-08-26 1979-02-27 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Stepping motor control circuit
US4145643A (en) * 1976-09-03 1979-03-20 Hitachi, Ltd. Control apparatus for driving a pulse motor
GB2018684A (en) * 1978-01-20 1979-10-24 Mccorquodale Machine Systens L Printing apparatus
US4215302A (en) * 1978-01-26 1980-07-29 Mcc Associates Control system for stepping motors, a method of operating stepping motors, and a method for selecting current patterns for stepping motors

Family Cites Families (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR1408169A (en) * 1963-10-10 1965-08-13 Moscovski Energuetitcheski Ins Method ensuring the on-off speed of an electric stepping motor and device for implementing this method
JPS5818880B2 (en) * 1972-07-06 1983-04-15 沖電気工業株式会社 Stepping motor control method
GB1449303A (en) * 1973-07-19 1976-09-15 Pitney Bowes Inc Minimizing stepper motor oscillations
JPS5296309A (en) * 1976-02-10 1977-08-12 Nippon Telegr & Teleph Corp <Ntt> Driving system for pulse motor

Patent Citations (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3586953A (en) * 1967-09-22 1971-06-22 Fairchild Camera Instr Co Stepper motor control system
US3588661A (en) * 1968-04-24 1971-06-28 Mesur Matic Electronics Corp Electronic damping for stepping motors
US3573589A (en) * 1969-04-01 1971-04-06 Burroughs Corp Position servo system for a motor including detenting at destination
DE2042903A1 (en) * 1970-08-29 1972-03-02 Berger Gerhard Procedure for avoiding or reducing the flooding of the rotors of stepper motors after the last previously selected pulse
US3864615A (en) * 1971-09-13 1975-02-04 Royal Industries Electronic programmer for multi-phase motor
US4074179A (en) * 1975-06-16 1978-02-14 Warner Electric Brake & Clutch Company Position detection methods and apparatus for stepping motors
US4025837A (en) * 1975-06-30 1977-05-24 International Business Machines Corporation Adaptive control circuit for a stepping motor
US4142140A (en) * 1976-08-26 1979-02-27 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Stepping motor control circuit
US4145643A (en) * 1976-09-03 1979-03-20 Hitachi, Ltd. Control apparatus for driving a pulse motor
US4131840A (en) * 1976-09-16 1978-12-26 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Circuit arrangement for setting a rotatable type carrier over the shortest path of rotation
US4115726A (en) * 1977-01-04 1978-09-19 Hewlett-Packard Company Open-loop electric drive with corrective controller
DE2721271A1 (en) * 1977-05-11 1978-11-16 Siemens Ag CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENT FOR SYNCHRONIZING A TYPE CARRIER IN PRINTING DEVICES
GB2018684A (en) * 1978-01-20 1979-10-24 Mccorquodale Machine Systens L Printing apparatus
US4215302A (en) * 1978-01-26 1980-07-29 Mcc Associates Control system for stepping motors, a method of operating stepping motors, and a method for selecting current patterns for stepping motors

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
"Delayed Closed-Loop Scheme for Stepping Motor Control" Bechtle, IBM Journal of Research & Development, vol. 20, No. 3, pp. 235-243, May 1976. *

Cited By (17)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4414497A (en) * 1981-01-22 1983-11-08 Verbatim Corporation Digitally controllable electronic damper
US4518308A (en) * 1982-03-01 1985-05-21 Acrobe Technology Inc. Manipulator apparatus
DE3221561A1 (en) * 1982-06-08 1983-12-08 Triumph-Adler Aktiengesellschaft für Büro- und Informationstechnik, 8500 Nürnberg Method for quickly positioning a type wheel driven by a step motor
US5415480A (en) * 1983-02-23 1995-05-16 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Printer having a stepping motor for driving and retaining a type wheel
US4624588A (en) * 1983-11-08 1986-11-25 Maverick Microsystems, Inc. Full field MICR encoder
US4589790A (en) * 1984-05-29 1986-05-20 International Business Machines Corporation Method and apparatus for controlling escapement
US4745346A (en) * 1984-10-04 1988-05-17 Pitney Bowes Inc. Electronic postage meter print wheel setting optimization system
US4541334A (en) * 1984-10-24 1985-09-17 Micr Short Systems, Ltd. MICR Printer
US4746847A (en) * 1985-05-17 1988-05-24 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Control system for a stepping motor
US4843294A (en) * 1987-12-01 1989-06-27 Ford Aerospace & Communications Corporation Solar array stepping to minimize array excitation
US5227709A (en) * 1990-10-09 1993-07-13 Seagate Technology, Inc. Closed loop single step response by open winding voltage feedback system and method for multiple phase step motors
US5262907A (en) * 1991-07-31 1993-11-16 Seagate Technology, Inc. Hard disc drive with improved servo system
US5574351A (en) * 1994-10-21 1996-11-12 Pitney Bowes Inc. Method and apparatus for control of stepper motors
US5583410A (en) * 1994-10-21 1996-12-10 Pitney Bowes Inc. Method and apparatus for multiplex control of a plurality of stepper motors
US6064171A (en) * 1999-06-11 2000-05-16 Lexmark, International, Inc. Host based stepper motor phase controller and method therefor
US20080088385A1 (en) * 2006-10-13 2008-04-17 Andrew Roman Gizara Pulse width modulation sequence generating a near critical damped step response
US7889019B2 (en) * 2006-10-13 2011-02-15 Andrew Roman Gizara Pulse width modulation sequence generating a near critical damped step response

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
NO793692L (en) 1980-05-20
CA1145440A (en) 1983-04-26
ATE5503T1 (en) 1983-12-15
FR2441879A1 (en) 1980-06-13
FR2441879B1 (en) 1981-04-17
NO152328C (en) 1985-09-11
EP0011260B1 (en) 1983-11-30
EP0011260A1 (en) 1980-05-28
JPS5577397A (en) 1980-06-11
DE2966451D1 (en) 1984-01-05
NO152328B (en) 1985-06-03
DK487579A (en) 1980-05-18
ES486045A1 (en) 1980-05-16
AU5290179A (en) 1980-05-22
AU524074B2 (en) 1982-08-26

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4258622A (en) Method of positioning a moving part and a printer operating in accordance with said method
US4189246A (en) Variable print-hammer control for on-the-fly-printing
JP2998967B2 (en) Apparatus having vibration type motor
CA1133048A (en) System and method of minimizing velocity fluctuations in a synchronous motor shaft
US4574291A (en) Phase locked synchronizer for printer timing control
GB2088645A (en) High speed, high response drive
US5416374A (en) Ultrasonic motor and electronic apparatus equipped with ultrasonic motor
US3497778A (en) Part positioning device and plural stepping motor control therefor
US5155418A (en) Actuator device
US5229678A (en) Drive control unit for an ultrasonic step motor
US1967072A (en) Recording method and system
US4305674A (en) Lateral position control means for data printer heads
US3624660A (en) Drive for apparatus recording operational conditions of a car
US2497069A (en) Servo system testing
US4414497A (en) Digitally controllable electronic damper
JP2669909B2 (en) Vibration wave actuator device
US4405248A (en) Advancing device in electrically driven typewriters and similar machines
US4959738A (en) Method and apparatus for driving a stepping motor
SU844980A1 (en) Apparatus for monitoring part cross section contour
SU858150A1 (en) Synchronous stepping vibromotor
EP0163090A2 (en) Method and apparatus for controlling escapement
US3293922A (en) Speed regulating device
JPS6316318Y2 (en)
SU920902A1 (en) Device for control of stepping vibromotor
SU1348588A1 (en) Device for converting oscillatory motions to rotary motion